French airstrikes hit stadium, museum & medical clinics in Raqqa

The Mirror is carrying the story of anti-ISIS activists in Syria reporting that French airstrikes have hit a stadium, museum and medical clinics in Raqqa. This is the exact pandering to the war mongers of ISIS and the western war profiteers, that we warned of in this article, perpetuating the cycle of violence further to reach their bloody objectives.

The Unquenchable Thirst For War

“Futuristic” films are produced in the USA about less materially advanced human populations laid siege by merciless robot armies, with apparently no recognition that the government is inflicting that very thing on very real people. In the UK last year there were commemorations for the centenary of the “War To End All Wars”, with apparently no recognition that the country was engaged in multiple wars at the time. People old enough to remember the London Blitz still talk about little else than that overwhelming experience, with apparently no recognition that their government has been carrying out aerial bombing campaigns on foreign soil on a regular basis ever since.

Perhaps never in the history of humanity have a people been so utterly unaware of themselves being at war. When considering David Cameron’s legacy the Spectator claimed “he is likely to be seen in the front rank of peacetime Tory premiers.”[1] The Financial Times and Guardian refer to the previous Tory LibDem coalition as “The first peacetime coalition since the 1930s”[2][3] The labour party claim he oversaw the “lowest level of house building of any peacetime Government since the 1920s.”[4]Despite being the de-facto Commander-in-Chief of the British Armed Forces involved continuously in wars throughout his premiership Mr Cameron himself refers to his time as “peacetime”.[5] The current wars are as well much more aggressive than most conflicts Britain has been involved in during the previous few decades, yet despite body counts reaching to hundreds of thousands—by many estimates, millions—no one standing behind the guns seem to appreciate or admit they are at war.

The aggressor governments have mastered the art of deceiving their public; euphemisms shield the reality and the media rarely question the ethics of the killing. Promises are made not to deploy “troops on the ground” and the public, having lifted their heads from the pillow just enough to notice another war front opening up, go back to a peaceful sleep with the knowledge that it is onlyother people who will be killed. The peoples of the aggressor nations are the last to experience conflict but when anything does hit home there is shock at the “injustice” and “incredulity” of the motive; while their armies continue with increased vigour over newfound justification to ravage lands out of sight beyond the horizon.

Even the fighters struggle to know they are fighting, drone operators burn out from the confusion of living safely at home with their family while killing people by remote control thousands of miles away,[6] knocking back happy pills to get through another 9 to 5 with a kill ratio of 28 civilians to one targeted combatant.[7]

Consider the superpowers of the USA, China and Russia and lesser powers like the UK and France and note that none have experienced war on their core soil (other than around their previously colonised periphery) since WW2 but one or other have been at war pretty much continuously since then. All the wars have been fought for control over other nations, with the foreign soil as battlegrounds not their own, with foreign people becoming the innocent victims of “collateral damage” or given legitimacy as targets by labelling them insurgents or terrorists if they resist. It looks almost as though the total destruction of the country and people being fought over is of no consideration to the aggressors, which is no surprise if what they are after is safely underground: tin in Vietnam, uranium in South Sudan, gold anywhere and oil everywhere. Routes for pipelines need to be cleared anyway but the more destroyed the infrastructure the more dependant any surviving inhabitants will be on the eventual victor who will portray themselves as their protecting friend and helper. That is not to mention the astronomical profits some make from the economy of perpetual war and bloodshed itself.[8]

Bad enough to be in the crosshairs of one superpower on the make, bad enough to be under the boot of one dictator, but Syria now is experiencing the perfect storm, having two superpowers and their coalitions, a murderous dictator, infighting rebel factions and ISIS all demanding allegiance and all rushing to pull the trigger on whoever opposes them.

Looking just at the area controlled by ISIS gives an idea of the people’s plight. It is proving hard to estimate the number of ISIS fighters with figures ranging from 9,000 to 200,000, it could be reasonable to suppose it is fewer than 100,000.[9] This is for an area with a population of approximately 6.5 million, in other words 98.5% of the people on the ground are civilians who are forced to fly the flag of their new ISIS masters or be killed by them. That flag is then all the justification needed for the USA or Russia to kill them if ISIS has not already. The air forces of the USA, Russia, the UK, the Nederlands, Belgium, Australia, Canada, France, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Morocco, Bahrain, Iran and Turkey[10] been dropping bombs both guided and unguided onto the 6.4 million Syrian and Iraqi civilians unfortunate enough to be living in the area of ISIS. In these attacks official estimates claim 15,000 ISIS fighters have been killed while the tally of civilian casualties stands at 2. That would be quite something when much more intelligence led and pin pointed drone strikes can boast of only a 28 civilians to 1 targeted combatant kill ratio. Muslims agree that ISIS is a disease, but in no sense is it good medicine to kill the patient to beat a disease.

Far from being concerned about the moral right of the UK to bomb another nation that has not attacked us, with the inevitable civilian deaths that would result, the Defence Secretary Michael Fallon now claims it would be “morally indefensible” not to drop bombs across Syria in addition to his almost forgotten Iraq bombing.[11] Having learnt the dangers of “sexing up” dossiers the government now does not even bother trying to build a case with evidence, rather the only reason he could bring was to protect the streets of Britain against a repeat of an attack in Tunisia by someone who had never been to Syria. The BBC, supportive as ever to the government’s case for war, already brings up the Russian plane crash which might or might not have been caused by an internal bomb from a group who too hastily claimed to have shot it down. Though with ISIS and/or people claiming to be ISIS conveniently claiming responsibility for everything from the Talk Talk hack[12] to Chelsea’s disastrous start to the season,[13] in fact someone claiming to be ISIS has helpfully admitted that (to paraphrase slightly) “Everything is our fault unless you can prove otherwise”[14] so there is little doubt the investigation will come to a conclusion that calls for more war. As Mr Fallon says, “This is a new parliament, and we are continuing to work to build a consensus that would give us the authority to strike at the heart of ISIL in north-east Syria,” A more morally secure approach might be to conclude that if it is not self-evidently necessary to bomb a 98.5% civilian populated area one should not twist people’s arms to do it.

Even if the eagerness for bombing or the ever shifting and barely proven justifications do not worry a moral person at least the result should. The giant tornado like force of the Western led coalition is roving across the Muslim world, setting down from place to place on various flimsy pretexts and to a lesser or greater extent wiping away the civilisation that was there with almost no acknowledgment that real human beings are being slaughtered by the process. Fighting an aerial only war which everyone agrees prevents outright victory, while the resistance, which will inevitably form among the survivors on the ground, will ensure the continuation of the conflict as shown by the increase in ISIS conscripts since the bombing campaign begun.[15] This could continue for as long as the Western governments want it to continue and it is shaping up to be the method of war to end all peace.

Those escaping from this hell like scenario are lining up on the borders of Europe and are called “economic migrants” to distance them from people’s conscience. Xenophobes tell them to seek sanctuary in Muslim nations instead but can anyone predict which will be safe? Recent history shows all that is needed is a few masked men to raise an ISIS flag in a country (updated from claimed “links to Al Qaeda”) to have eyes turned blind to all the war machinery of the “civilised world” heading that way. They are forced instead to risk death to reach the countries that participate in war but don’t experience it. When they arrive, the final insult: they find Islam being blamed for the destruction being wrought on the once beautiful homelands they would have much preferred to stay in.

It is a bit late to realise that if you destroy a people’s home they will look for somewhere else to live; a bit late to worry about the growing number of Muslims and the influence of Islām in Europe. But they did not know Allāh is the best of planners.

There is never anything better for Muslims than to return to their religion for guidance. Striving for justice while maintaining uprightness, patience and perseverance from the remembrance that Allāh’s will is the only unstoppable force.

Source: www.islam21c.com

America: Your Solidarity with Paris is Embarrassingly Misguided

The World, at Large —We are in mourning. Again. Indeed, Paris is in mourning, again.

For the second time in less than a year, we are all de facto Parisians — with Facebook profiles, casinos, and whole buildings draped in the blue, white, and red of the French flag. Solidarity as sympathy, bien sûr — a most poignant message that humanity stands with Paris — and will act decisively to avenge the “carnage” unexpectedly wrought by those whose motives most will never fall victim to, much less comprehend.

Evidently, despite the accumulated knowledge of the entire planet at our disposal through the computer screen, solidarity has escaped some of us.

And I am weary.

Without question, I mourn for Paris’ recent victims and their families — and I would never claim knowledgeable firsthand experience of the same. But I refuse — despite my partial French heritage — to cloak myself in nationalism of any stripe or star, particularly not now. Because, besides victims in Paris, an incomprehensibly astronomic number of people have been grieving loss of the highest order for some time — in places whose names roll off our tongues as if it’s accepted that violence simply happens there — and a majority likely couldn’t guessthe colors on these victims’ flags.

You see, I also mourn for those killed mere hours before Paris crumbled into chaos, in strikingly similar attacks in Beirut.

I mourn the hundreds of thousands displaced or killed in Syria, no matter their pledged allegiance. No matter their professed religion. No matter.

I mourn for the millions killed in ongoing and renewed, illegal United States’ aggression in Iraq — and those facing a torturous demise from exposure to depleted uranium employed in violation of international and humanitarian law — for reasons far closer to ‘American’ and corporate hegemony than compassionate principle.

I mourn the untold number killed in the United States’ insidious — and seemingly permanent — war in Afghanistan. And the countless children there who know nothing of peace, much less the feeling of safety it brings. And patients and staff recently targeted, bombed, and then shot while fleeing the Médecins Sans Frontières hospital in Kunduz — and the irony of that humanitarian organization’s French roots.

I mourn those forced into human slavery or sex trafficking in Malaysia; and curse the scant hope they escape, now that the massive TPP has garnered U.S. government’s tacit approval of the abhorrence that is human trade.

I mourn for Palestinians, whose land was usurped — and whose lives and infrastructure and families and sense of security and HOMES are under siege and occupation by an illegal and actively terrorist State.

I mourn the patients and staff at the over 100 healthcare facilities in Yemen that have been BOMBED since March. And the apparently soulless who found an acceptable target in hospitals.

I mourn for Yemen.

I mourn for the victims of complicit government violence in Mexico, and 43 students and their families who lack answers.

I mourn for Chinese men, women, and children working, quite literally, as slaves, so the West can be rude at dinner and take endless pictures — of its narcissistically apathetic self.

I mourn rampant genocide — past and present — for the sake of manifest destiny. And empire. And imperialism. And inexplicable and unstated reasons.

In fact, I mourn for all victims of terror, whether State or group sponsored, without conditions attached to my grief — no matter location, nor loyalty, nor arbitrary geopolitical happenstance of location of a victim’s birth. And I’m already grieving those soon to be terror’s next victims; since, as French President François Hollande jarringly warned, avenging Paris’ victims just birthed (yet another) “PITILESS” war.

As if gentle were somehow a method to employ in waging war.

Yes, I mourn for Paris. But I do so while weeping in shame at the deplorable supercilious judgment ensconced in Western reaction to it; for countless pitiable xenophobes and their endless vapid justifications; for arrogant commentary from politicians and their media mouthpieces with their embarrassing post-tragedy clamoring to exploit ignorant heartstrings for the appropriate victims; for the endless War of Terror — and the service members who somehow haven’t yet deduced that this would ALL END if they simply refused to fight.

The fact is, grief on this scale is exhausting. And I’m very nearly out of tears.

So keep these victims around the globe in mind — every, single man, woman and child who has, who is, and who will suffer the maiming, horror, torture, and death that’s as necessary to war as those who take up arms — when you next excuse a politician’s stance on war, because the rest of his or her platform seems really promising.

Or, at least, seems the lesser of two evils.

And shake that flag from your social media profile; and your home; and your thoughts. Because as long as you wear just one flag, your attempt to stand with victims of terror is a most embarrassingly hollow solidarity, indeed.